Disturbia, fiction, family, friends, and everything else between the lions.
Published on October 26, 2010 By Tova7 In Blogging

<<<<<My FAMILY>>>>>

 

Tomorrow I go in for a mastectomy, port placement, and immediate reconstruction (if possible, if NOT then an “expander” is placed). 

They tell me, odds are less than 5% I could actually die from complications.  I’m “young,” healthy, whatever.

Odds are pretty small I could have breast cancer too.

These days, I don’t play the odds.

That’s why I’m writing this.  (To say Hey JU!  Thanks for keeping me company and sane (ok that last might be a stretch;)), especially on my husband’s long deployments.  Thanks for the creative pushes, the arguments, the laughter.  Just, thanks.)

And on that note, I finished writing small letters to my family, just in case tomorrow is my last sunrise.

And I realized while doing so that breast cancer shouldn’t have been the catalyst for such literary sentiment.  None of us are guaranteed tomorrow.  Not a single one.  So, what happens if you die on the way home from work?  While driving to the grocery store?  Whatever?  Are you content leaving the world, leaving your loved ones with the way things are right now? 

I wasn’t.

So I penned, (typed) up notes to my husband and kids.

Sure I tell them I love them every single day.  But I wanted to write something down for them to have, to hold, on the days I’m not around.

It’s not the real thing.  But, it’s the best I have to offer once I’m gone.

Odds are, I will be fine.

Odds are, I will recover.

Odds are, I will live to die another day.

Odds are…..

 

 

(to be continued, or, er, not).


Comments (Page 3)
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on Nov 08, 2010

That could be called carrying our cross.

Lol, Lula you are SO Catholic.

Well, I couldn't help but think of it when KFC said,

He expects us to at least carry something; at least carry a load.
  

I don't believe every Christian has a cross to bear, unless you call living life in a fallen world bearing a cross, then technically everyone carries it.

True, the problem of suffering has confronted mankind ever since Adam and Eve's fall from God's grace  and across the board, suffering is an escapable element of human life for both worldlings and Christians.

But when it comes to suffering through trials in our lives, Christians are very different from worldlings.

Christ said, "Come follow Me." I understand that to mean the He carried His Cross and we are to carry our cross, meaning carrying our times of suffering uniting our crosses with the Savior's cross. In this sense suffering has great value.

As Christians, it goes to our dignity, to affirming our inestimable worth for even if we are totally broken in physical or mental illness, we still have inestimable worth. Our human dignity doesn't rest on our independence, but rather on our total dependence on the One who created us in His Image.

There is a Navy saying that calm seas do not make good sailors. Stormy seas challenge his full potential. So it is with a Christian's suffering if it is offered up to God for that's what gives our suffering purpose. It strengthens, purifies and matures our faith drawing us even closer to God with the understanding the God wills only our good.   

 

on Nov 09, 2010

It strengthens, purifies and matures our faith drawing us even closer to God with the understanding the God wills only our good.

Amen.

Christians are very different from worldlings

Don't think I've ever heard that term before.  Worldlings...lol.  I like it!  For some reason tho, it makes me think of DIAMONDS.  Big Sparkling HARD diamonds.

Weird.

 

on Nov 09, 2010

 

Christians are very different from worldlings

Don't think I've ever heard that term before. Worldlings...lol. I like it!

I call them worldlings because in St.John 17: 6-16 Christ makes the distinction as to whom He prays for and to whom He does not.....

I have manifested thy name to the men whom thou hast given me out of the world. Thine they were, and to me thou gavest them; and they have kept thy word. 7 Now they have known, that all things which thou hast given me, are from thee: 8 Because the words which thou gavest me, I have given to them; and they have received them, and have known in very deed that I came out from thee, and they have believed that thou didst send me. 9 I pray for them: I pray not for the world, but for them whom thou hast given me: because they are thine: 10 And all my things are thine, and thine are mine; and I am glorified in them.

11 And now I am not in the world, and these are in the world, and I come to thee. Holy Father, keep them in thy name whom thou has given me; that they may be one, as we also are. 12 While I was with them, I kept them in thy name. Those whom thou gavest me have I kept; and none of them is lost, but the son of perdition, that the scripture may be fulfilled. 13 And now I come to thee; and these things I speak in the world, that they may have my joy filled in themselves. 4 I have given them thy word, and the world hath hated them, because they are not of the world; as I also am not of the world. 15 I pray not that thou shouldst take them out of the world, but that thou shouldst keep them from evil.

For some reason tho, it makes me think of DIAMONDS. Big Sparkling HARD diamonds.

Diamonds? Now you have me laughing and it feels good.

 

on Nov 09, 2010

I call them worldlings because in St.John 17: 6-16 Christ

Like I said.  I like it!  Gonna use it too....just wait and see what creative places I find to insert that gem.

Diamonds? Now you have me laughing and it feels good.

 

 

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